This is for educational purpose only and im not responsible if any illegal activity
English French German Spain Italian Dutch Russian Portuguese Japanese Korean Arabic Chinese Simplified

Sunday 1 July 2012

How to Connect Your Laptop to Your Television




Expand the description and view the text of the steps for this how-to video.


Check out Howcast for other do-it-yourself videos from thefactory and more videos in the Laptop Computers category.


You can contribute too! Create your own DIY guide at http://www.howcast.com/videos/new or produce your own Howcast spots with the Howcast Filmmakers Program at http://www.howcast.com/filmmakers/apply.


Tired of squinting over your laptop? There are several ways to turn a big-screen TV into your new computer monitor and enjoy video games, web content, and photos like never before.


To complete this How-To you will need:


A laptop
A digital television
A male-to-male video cable of one of the following types:
S-Video
VGA 15-pin
DVI
DVI-to-HDMI
A mini-to-RCA audio cable
A PC-to-TV converter box
A mini-DVI-to-VGA or mini-DVI-to-DVI adapter for Macs


Step 1: Connect with S-Video


First, connect a video cable -- you've got several choices. For PC users, an easy option is an S-Video cable. Most PCs and digital televisions are equipped with an S-Video port.


Tip: The ends of S-Video cables usually feature either four or seven pins and pinholes. Check your TV and laptop ports to make sure they match.


Step 2: Connect with VGA


If you have an older HDTV, try a VGA cable, which produces better picture quality and works with both Macs and PCs. To connect, turn off your laptop and your TV. Find the trapezoid-shaped VGA outlets on the TV and on your laptop. Once you're connected, power everything back on.


Tip: Macs need a DVI- or mini-DVI-to-VGA adapter to connect the VGA cable.


Step 3: Connect with DVI


You can also connect with a DVI video cable. A DVI connection is a step above VGA in picture quality, but only newer computers and HDTVs come with DVI ports. Connect as with a VGA cable.


Tip: Some Macs require a mini-DVI-to-DVI adapter for DVI connections.


Step 4: Connect with HDMI


If your HDTV doesn't have a DVI connector, use a cable that is HDMI on one end, and DVI on the other to connect to your laptop.


Step 5: Connect audio


Hook up the audio. After you've connected your laptop to the TV via video cable, connect the mini-to-RCA cable from your computer's headphone jack to your TV.


Step 6: Use a wireless converter


A final PC option is to go wireless, using a converter box and the software that comes with it. Using a VGA cable, plug the box into your TV and install the software onto your computer. The box will then convert your computer's VGA signal to the TV, and transfer both video and audio.


Step 7: Adjust display settings


If you have a PC, go to the Control Panel and adjust the display settings to accompany double display on both your monitor and TV set. Mac laptops should automatically adjust for double display. If yours doesn't, go to System Preferences, click on Display, and then Detect Displays.


Step 8: Find your laptop


Click your TV's video source -- usually a button called "input" or "TV/Video" on your remote -- until your laptop comes up. You're set!

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Blogger news